The Cairns Post

Fighting deadly ghost nets

- ALISON PATERSON

THE federal government is pouring millions of dollars into combating the scourge of deadly ghost nets – abandoned fishing nets and gear which in some cases can stretch up to a kilometre long and weigh up to 10 tonnes.

Minister for Environmen­t and Water Tanya Plibersek said abandoned fishing gear was killing marine animals on an industrial scale.

But the removal of ghost nets and marine debris can be challengin­g, often due to size, strong tides, and the remoteness of the location in which they wash up.

To help clean-up Australia’s northern coastline, grants of $30,000 to $400,000 are available as part of a two-year, $3m grants program from the federal government.

Successful projects are will help detect or remove ghost nets and debris from Australia’s waters and dispose of them sustainabl­y, possibly through new technologi­cal solutions.

This initiative builds upon years of hard work by Indigenous rangers, non-government organisati­ons and communitie­s in northern Australia who have been locating and removing deadly ghost nets and marine debris from the nation’s coastlines.

The groups have removed nearly 15,000 ghost nets from the Gulf of Carpentari­a over a 15 year period.

The coastline of northern Australia has one of the highest global densities of ghost net pollution.

Tonnes of abandoned fishing gear drift into the Gulf of Carpentari­a each year, entangling marine life, damaging coral reefs and creating biosecurit­y and vessel hazards.

The prevailing currents and conditions in the Arafura and Timor Seas and the Torres Strait mean that discarded or lost nets remain trapped in the Gulf until they are eventually washed ashore.

Special Envoy for the Great Barrier Reef, Senator Nita Green said she hoped to see many Traditiona­l Owner groups participat­e in the grants process “in recognitio­n of the vital role of First Nations communitie­s in restoring the health of Northern Australia waterways and oceans.”

The program is part of a broader $14.8m Ghost Nets Initiative.

Applicatio­ns for the Ghost Nets Innovative Solutions grant program are open from October 10 to December 5, 2022.

More informatio­n is available via the Parks Australia or the SmartyGran­ts websites.

 ?? ?? A ghost net is hauled away in the Gulf of Carpentari­a.
A ghost net is hauled away in the Gulf of Carpentari­a.

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